▎ 摘 要
Nanostructures of Cu2O/CuO hydroxide suitable for the electrochemical determination of glucose are obtained by solid-state dewetting of CuO layers 6, 8, and 31 nm thin deposited by sputtering onto 240 mu m-thick graphene paper. Solid-state dewetting in nitrogen produces a partial decomposition of CuO into Cu2O and Cu. X-ray diffraction patterns reveal the presence of high-index crystallographic facets, which are reactive and useful toward glucose oxidation to gluconolactone. Typically, morphology studied by scanning electron microscopy reveals faceted nanoparticles with an average size below 200 nm. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy shows that the nanostructure surfaces of Cu2O and metallic copper exposed to natural ambient are promptly reoxidized and hydroxidized to a mixture of CuO and Cu(OH)(2). Electrochemical characterization in amperometric mode reveals linear response to glucose concentration in the range from 50 to 10 x 10(-3) m, sensitivity up to 83 mu A cm(-2) mm (-1), and limit of detection up to 3.6 x 10(-6) m. Good combination of low cost and simplicity of preparation with low limit of detection, high sensitivity, and wide linear range makes the proposed electrodes suitable for a variety of applications ranging from health to food and beverage industries.